Friday 26 December 2014

Pastor's column: People of America still believe in Jesus


As we approach another Christmas surrounded by a cloud of mysteries, we desire to believe in a possibility that deity became humanity, The innocence of a new born broke the silence of a creator reconnecting with His creation. The pieces of life's puzzle can fit together.
I was a lonely teenager struggling to find acceptance from anyone who would look in my direction. I felt so empty, so lost in a sea of humanity. Everyone, it seemed to me, had a direction and a purpose but me. I believed the birth narrative of Jesus, but so what. What did it have to do with me?
Alone in my bedroom one night I couldn't get out of my mind a statement from my best friend, "sure we know we're going to Hell and we're going to raise a lot of hell when we get there."
I had no desire to go to Hell but somehow know I was headed in that direction. Suddenly, I had an encounter with Jesus that shook me to the core of my being. I felt the very presence of God come into my bedroom that night. I was all alone humanly speaking. I dropped to my knees and cried out for help to a God I believed in but had no personal experience with. He spoke to my heart, "you are good when around the good and bad when around the bad, who are you?"
I cried out for God to forgive my hypocrisy and I felt a warm rush of love pour over me and I felt His acceptance. It marked me on the inside. Jesus became an abiding presence in my life from that moment on.
Christmas has a very special and personal meaning to me now. Christmas is Jesus to me. Jesus is not a religion or a belief system any more — He is my best friend, the lover of my soul. The One who guides me through life, picking me up when I fall, holding me when I'm lost or lonely, my encourager, my strength and my Lord, my Savior and my God. He is Emmanuel (God with us).
He's soon to return to the earth to receive His followers to Himself. He came 2,000 years ago, He comes every time someone opens their heart to Him and He's coming again to restore the broken world to Himself! Do you believe the birth story of the New Testament? Do you believe the death/resurrection story? Do you believe there is life after death?
Merry Christmas. Merry CHRIST-mas! "For unto us a child is born, unto us a Son is given. His Name is called wonderful counselor, mighty God, Prince of Peace." That Jesus was/is real! You who know Him must stand up proudly and end your quiet testimony. When the apostle Paul encountered Jesus in that blinding light experience (Acts 9), he then traveled the whole know world sharing his encounter.
I had a powerful encounter with Jesus while alone in my bedroom just before I turned 16 (44 years ago). It marked me forever. I don't just believe now, I know Jesus is who He said He was because of that one divine moment in my history. But more yet, He gives me daily strength and guidance. I was a nobody from a poor family who had little education. God called me to serve Him almost immediately and since has taken me all over the world giving me opportunities to share His message. What message? "I love you so much that I'll pay the price to cover your sins." That's John 3:16 in a nutshell. That's our only hope for America; for the world.
It matters what you believe. Paul tells us in Romans 10:9-11: "if you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved; for with the heart a person believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation." For the Scripture says, "Whoever believes in Him will not be disappointed."
The setting of Jesus' first advent (coming): Rome is rising to its full strength. Jews are oppressed and a census is being taken to count everyone and to know who and where they are. People are nervous and scared. They begin to cry out for the Messiah to come. They beg God and they are believing the time is ripe for Him. A young virgin named Mary is engaged to be married. An angel appears to her and tells her she has been chosen to bare the Son of God. She accepts. The time for delivery has come but Rome won't wait on anyone so Joseph (her espoused) takes Mary to Bethlehem (the place of his ancestry — King David). The city is packed and there's no room for them so they find themselves having to take refuge behind a packed Inn in the horse barn/stable. Too late, babies wait for no one! Jesus is born in that barn and His first crib is a feeding trough/manger. His birth is announced by angels to shepherds who were keeping watch over their flock outside the city. They are led to the manger to worship Him.
There is awe. There is reverence. There is wonder. This is He… the long awaited Messiah now asleep in a lowly barn. A humble beginning into a world of turmoil. In about 70 years from this moment the Roman Empire will destroy Jerusalem leaving both Jews and Christians running for their lives.
But for 33 years, Jesus lives among us teaching and demonstrating to us the ways of God and the directions to His coming Kingdom. That's CHRIST-mas.
In our world of turmoil where unrest surrounds us (not unlike Rome in Jesus' day), there is hope. There is a Christ shouting to our hearts, "I love you" and willing to reveal Himself to us if we but ask! He came and told us before He left that He's coming back ... soon. He's preparing a place for us so that we can be where He is ... for all eternity (John 14). Choose now to include Jesus in your new year. Include some quiet, for some awe, for some wonder. Jesus loves you — yes all of us and He awaits your response. Soon, very soon He's coming again. Have a blessed New Year, Licking County filled with God's love and the hope only He provides.

5 things to know about Alamo Village


In this Dec. 4, 2014 photo, Rich Curilla walks past a replica of the San Fernando Cathedral, built for John Wayne's 1960 movie "The Alamo," in Brackettville, Texas. The movie set includes a full-scale re-creation of the Alamo compound. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
BRACKETTVILLE, Texas (AP) — A Texas businessman wants to revive Alamo Village, the movie set built by John Wayne for his epic film about the historic Alamo siege. It's been closed since 2009. Here are five things to know about the 400-acre park's history:
— Nearly a half-dozen Alamo-themed TV shows or movies were made there, as well as hundreds of other productions. One was the acclaimed 1989 TV miniseries "Lonesome Dove," where Alamo Village served as a stand-in for San Antonio, Fort Worth and Santa Rosa, New Mexico. A cantina used in the series, which also was a restaurant for tourists, has a saloon bar that came from a San Francisco brothel.
— Wayne's 1960 movie was nominated in 1961 for seven Oscars: best picture, supporting actor (Chill Wills), color cinematography, editing, sound and two for music, including the song "The Green Leaves of Summer." It only won for sound.
— "The Alamo" was among the top ten grossing movies in the U.S. in 1960, with nearly $8 million in box office receipts. But that equaled only two-thirds of its $12 million budget, a good part of it financed by Wayne himself. TV rights purchased a decade later by NBC put the film in the black, according to IMDb.com.
— Happy and Virginia Shahan owned the 22,000-acre ranch. He was a former mayor of Brackettville and lured Hollywood after the post-World War II deactivation of Fort Clark, a frontier Army post established less than 20 years after the fall of the real Alamo in 1836. Happy Shahan saw Westerns as a way to offset the economic losses from the closing of the fort, whose commanders included a young colonel, George S. Patton.
— Among Alamo Village performance alumni is country singer Linda Davis, who won a Grammy with Reba McEntire for their 1993 duet "Does He Love You." Davis' daughter, Hillary Scott, is lead co-singer in the multiple Grammy-winning group Lady Antebellum.

Guess Why Rush Limbaugh Thinks Idris Elba Can't Play James Bond

Idris Elba is widely considered to be the favourite to play James Bond once Daniel Craig hangs up his tuxedo - and Sony emails reveal that Amy Pascal is sweet on the idea - but not everyone thinks old Stringer Bell should be sipping martinis for a living. During his news programme this week, controversial commentator Rush Limbaugh offered his two cents on the matter. Ok lets cut to the chase: Limbaugh says Elba is black, so therefore cannot play Bond.
"James Bond is a total concept put together by Ian Fleming. He was white and Scottish. Period. That is who James Bond is," Limbaugh said.
"But now [they are] suggesting that the next James Bond should be Idris Elba, a black Briton, rather than a white from Scotland. But that's not who James Bond is."
"I know it's racist to probably point this out," he accepted.
Elba has gone on record as saying he would be interested in becoming the franchise's new star and during a Reddit AMA he told one user: "Yes, if it was offered to me, absolutely" when quizzed on the possibility of it happening.
During an interview with NPR, Elba - who returns as Luther for a two-part miniseries in 2015 - basically smashed Limbaugh's argument to bits anyway: "I just don't want to be called the first black James Bond. Do you understand what I'm saying? Sean Connery wasn't the Scottish James Bond and Daniel Craig wasn't the blue-eyed James Bond. So if I played him, I don't want to be called the black James Bond."
Given the speculation in recent days, the bookmakers now have Elba as the heavy favourite to become the next Bond, with previous frontrunner Tom Hardy now available at odds of 4/1.

Kim Kardashian I'm Upset ... Because I Can't Get Pregnant

Kim Kardashian Pregnancy Problems

Kim Kardashian is upset for a very good reason ... as hard as she's been trying, she can't get pregnant.

Kim has been very open with friends and family ... she and Kanye have been trying to have another baby for the last 9 months but nothing has worked. Kim has been to fertility doctors, but they've made it clear ... having another baby is a long shot.

Turns out North West was a miracle baby ... she had 3 specialists tell her she couldn't get pregnant before North was conceived.  

Kim and Kanye assumed the second baby would be easier since it worked once, but the doctors are telling her that's not the case.

We're told Kim is trying to reduce her stress and cut down on traveling ... per doctor's advice.

The pic was taken Tuesday in Bev Hills after visiting her doctor. We're told Kanye has been to almost every doctor's visit ... Kim goes once a month.

"Unbroken" Tops "Into The Woods", "The Hobbit" On Christmas Day


With "Unbroken" surprisingly leading the pack, it looks like the 2014 domestic Box-Office is set to go out with a bang - and should thankfully carry over into 2015.
Heading into the 4-day Christmas weekend, "Unbroken" surpassed expectations by finishing with the best domestic box-office for Christmas Day. 
Heading into the weekend, most expects felt it was a fait accompli that "The Hobbit: Battle of the Five Armies" would win the Christmas weekend with $30-35 million total, with most estimates pegging "Into The Woods" at $25 million and "Unbroken" at about $20 million, at best.
Since it is late/early, depending on your point of view, I wil simply give you the raw numbers according to "Deadline" and add some brief analysis:
Word of mouth is on fire: Universal-Legendary’s Unbroken smashed through the onslaught of studio wide releases and holdovers on Christmas day and is looking to take No. 1 with $15.6M according to industry estimates, racing past Disney’s musical Into the Woods, which according to noon estimates was expected to finish first. As such, it comes as no surprise to learn that Unbroken earned an A- Cinemascore. Into the Woods, with a B, should land second with an estimated $13.6M while Warner Bros.’ The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies will settle for third with $12.7M, a 112% surge over its Christmas Eve low. A very good Christmas indeed with 25 films already expected to gross $75.9M, which is ahead of 2012’s $74.9M, but is just 2% off last Christmas’ $77.3M.
The success of "Unbroken" can be attributed in large part due to a major marketing effort that saw an appealing trailer shown on TV constantly. As a project of love by Angelina Jolie, it obviously helped that she was out there pushing the film. this included a 1-hour special on the film that aired on NBC.
Sony’s hot potato political comedy The Interview is eyeing about $1M from its 331 locations for a $3,000+ per theater. It’s a decent opening day, certainly not as jawdropping as the headlines the film has spurred from Sony hacking to 9/11 threats. Comps are spotty as limited bows in latter December are relegated to award contending titles. Not to mention, if you’re in the right arthouses, you can make $1M+ off of as little as 18 venues. The last political comedy to play the year-end holiday frame was 1997’s Wag the Dog (the film brilliantly pre-dated the 1998 Clinton sex scandal by a matter of weeks), which in its Jan. 2-4 sophomore weekend made $1.12M off 69 locations. It will be interesting to see how high Sony might expand The Interview‘s release. Such political football pics such as Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 and comedies like Sacha Baron Cohen’s Borat have grossed $24-26M bows off engagements in the low 800s.
I feel, given the attention this film has received, this debut is hardly surprising. In fact, I think if "The Interview" continues to perform well during it's run st the smaller theaters that chose to air it, at least one of the major chains will decide to show the film. The others will then likely follow suit - especially if Sony's other Holiday release, "Annie", continues to wither - it finished sixth on Christmas Day. 
"The Interview" would also likely be considered strong counter programming to the family and :serious" fare that will dominate screens leading up to awards season.
Finally, while films like "Fahrenheit 9/11" were polarizing and considered by some to be ant--American, the odd journey of "The Interview" has made it a sign of patriotism among many to go see the film.
Unbroken‘s anticipated $30M-plus four day bow couldn’t come at a better time for the Angelina Jolie-directed World War II film as it aims to pique Oscars’ voters before nom ballots are due on Jan 8. The film was overlooked by the Golden Globes and SAG Awards (except for a stunt ensemble nom), however, the Critics Choice Awards lauded Unbroken with noms for best pic, director, adapted screenplay and cinematography. Weeks prior to its opening, faith-based film marketers told Deadline that Unbroken was clicking with Christian audiences in a way that Ridley Scott’s Exodus: Gods and Kings was not, giving high praise for Jolie’s finesse in portraying Louis Zamperini’s spiritual stamina.
Yes, "Unbroken" and "American Sniper" were shut out at the Golden Globes, leading some to feel the organization was against any military films that portrayed the American military in a positive light. 
But Jolie, Bradley Cooper and ("American Sniper" director) Clint Eastwood carry a lot of star power and seem to be well-liked by the Academy. Stroong Christmas weekend showings by each will lead to positive press, which should generate more box-office, and so on. 
Both films are also being received well by critics, with "American Sniper" even moreso.
Regarding "Unbroken", it's worth noting that it proves something Hollywood gets wrong time and time again. Christian audiences are not going to flock to films that simple tell Christian stories. They also want to see films that have Christian values.
Toss in the fact that "Unbroken" is appealing to a lot of veterans across generations, and it should do well for quite a while.
If Unbroken and Into the Woods’ opening estimates hold until tomorrow AM, they’ll respectively rank as the third and sixth highest Christmas bows of all-time. The top four currently are Sherlock Holmes ($24.6M), 2o12’s Les Miserables ($18.1M), Django Unchained ($15M) and Marley and Me ($14.4m).
Paramount’s The Gambler earned a C+ Cinemascore and is expected to bring in $4.6M. It’s a bit gritty for holiday crowds, hence the low grade. Paramount bowed the hard R-rated The Wolf of Wall Street last Christmas and wound up with a C Cinemascore and a $116.9M final domestic cume (though many will attribute that to the film’s awards traction, of which The Gambler has yet to notch).
That is still a decent start for Mark Wahlberg's picture.
Weinstein Co.’s The Imitation Game clocked into seventh place after its expansion from 34 to 747 theaters. TWC executed a similar rollout for The Imitation Game as The King’s Speech, and the Alan Turing biopic’s Christmas B.O. is 39% higher than that of the King George VI biopic. TWC’s Big Eyes looks to be opening in 11th place with approximately $1.33M off 1,307 runs. The film is just beginning its awards season run at the B.O., powered by Golden Globe music/comedy noms for Amy Adams (best actress) and Christoph Waltz (best actor) as well as a third for Lana Del Rey’s title song “Big Eyes”.
This is good news for both of these critically-acclaimed, wildly different films. Cumberbatch and Adams are both getting raves, which can only help.
Paramount’s Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. biopic Selma is looking to post $300K off 19 venues for a per theater of $15,789 while Clint Eastwood’s American Sniper from Warner Bros. made $200K at four theaters for a $50K per screen at the Arclight Hollywood in Los Angeles, Northpark in Dallas, the Union Square and Lincoln Square in New York City.
"Selma" should expand and resonate with many, especially with all that has gone on this year. Word is the film is excellent and could pick up significant steam. In the end, more people may buy tickets to see this in theaters than the sinking "Annie" - or even the highly touted "Birdman".

'The Interview' leads movie sales on Google Play, Youtube

Sony's comedy "The Interview" has become the best-seller on a pair of Googlestreaming sites -- Google Play and YouTube Movies.
The controversial Seth Rogen-James Franco is listed as the top download as of late Christmas night, ahead of "Guardians of the Galaxy" and "The Maze Runner."
The studio began streaming "The Interview" on Wednesday through the sites along with Microsoft's Xbox Video and its own dedicated site, www.seetheinterview.com, for $5.99 or $14.99 for an HD version. None of the sites disclosed sales numbers.
Variety reported Wednesday that Netflix was in talks with Sony to stream the film to its subscribers. Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc., the leaders in online movie sales and rentals, have not joined signed deals with Sony.
Sony's PlayStation Video store said Wednesday that it would make the movie available in the U.S. "at a date to be determined shortly" but the site was hit by hackers on Christmas.
The movie began showing in more than 300 independent theaters on Christmas Day -- its original release date before Sony announced Dec 17 that it was scrapping the release due to threats by the hackers behind the massive cyber-attack that began on Nov. 24Sony did an about-face five days later in the face of criticism by President Obama.

Death anniversary of poets Parveen Shakir and Munir Niazi being observed today

Munir Niazi (L) and Parveen Shakir (R)
The date 26 December marks the death anniversaries of two great poets, Munir Niazi and Parveen Shakir who left an everlasting impact on modern Urdu literature.
Born in Karachi, Shakir completed her Masters in English and became an acclaimed poet with her first published collection “Khushbu” in 1976. Following 'Khushbu', she further wrote volumes “Sadburg” and “Khudkalami”. After her last published work, “Inkaar” in 1990, a collection “Kaf-e-Aina” was published posthumously in 1996. All of her collections can be viewed in the volume called "Maah-e-Tamam".
Popular for her outspoken feminist sentiments in poetry, Shakir received country’s highest honor—the “Pride of Performance” award for her significant contribution to Urdu literature. She also served as a teacher and a civil servant.
Belonging to the generation before Shakir, Munir Niazi was born in 1928 in India and following independence of Pakistan migrated to Sahiwal with his family.
Known for his melodious ghazals and harmonious poems, Niazi also penned songs for famous films like Uss bewafa ka shehr hai aur ham hein dost for Shaheed (1962) and Zinda rahen to kya hai jo mar jaaen ham to kya for Kharidar (1976).
Unlike Shakir who wrote in Urdu, Niazi also had command over Punjabi and published three of his works in Punjabi namely “Safar di Raat”, “Char Chup Cheezan” and “Rasta Dasan Walay Teray.” Some of his Urdu collections include “Taiz Hawa aur Tanha Phool”, “Jungle main Dhanak” and “Mah-e-Munir”.
While it has been 20 years since Shakir’s sad demise in a car accident in Lahore in 1994, Niazi passed away in 2006 after suffering from a respiratory disease.

Tuesday 2 December 2014

‘Sleepy Hollow’ Postmortem: Inside the Shocking Twists of the Midseason Finale


sleepy hollow orlando jones
Spoiler Warning: Do not read on unless you’ve seen “Sleepy Hollow” season two, episode eleven, titled “The Akeda.”
“Sleepy Hollow” has never been afraid to spill some blood in the name of averting the apocalypse, and Monday’s midseason finale upped the body count in a major way — first sacrificing the heroic Frank Irving (Orlando Jones) in the battle against War, then killing off the show’s main antagonist, the demon Moloch, after Henry (John Noble) had a change of heart about following the big bad’s orders when it came to murdering his mother Katrina (Katia Winter).
Variety caught up with Jones and executive producer Len Wiseman to discuss the fallout from the eventful episode, including where Henry goes from here and whether Irving will ever make a reappearance.
Len Wiseman
So, you just killed the show’s Big Bad halfway through the second season, which is a pretty bold move. Talk me through what went into that decision.
We were always leading up to wanting to [see how] Henry comes into his own. Henry has devoted his life to Moloch; he has served Moloch; and then to find out that he is just a servant, that another will take his place, and to see that he doesn’t have an importance to Moloch, is a big deal. We were always leading up to that fight within Henry. So where do we go from there, what happens? We also really wanted to present the idea that it’s not all about Moloch, and that’s why we decided that Moloch doesn’t die at the very end of the season, he dies at the midseason finale, because he’s not the endgame.
Obviously Ichabod (Tom Mison) and Katrina both want Henry to be redeemed, and killing Moloch seems like a step in the right direction, but is it as simple as that for Henry, or are there other motivations at play?
To your point, “is it?” That’s really the question: who is he doing that for, who is he trying to protect? Is he trying to protect his mother? Maybe. Is he trying to save himself? Maybe. What is the reason why he killed Moloch, ultimately? That’s what we’ll find out in terms of Henry in the rest of the season. And [that’s] what our characters are going to question. It’s not going to be clear to them why that move was made and how he benefits from killing Moloch.
The episode also said farewell to Frank Irving — what was the impetus behind that decision from a storytelling standpoint?
That decision, in terms of an ultimate sacrifice… He is controlled and he had sold his soul to evil, so that’s the one last power that he has — the fact that his soul is already taken — in having the power to wield the Sword of Methuselah. It gives him a strength and a power because he’s spent so much time regretting that choice that he made when he was tricked into selling his soul. He wants to be able to use that trick on Henry.
Since Henry was holding Frank’s soul, now that he’s dead, does that mean he can be raised by Henry in some way, or is he actually free?
It’s a pure sacrifice, it’s a soul for a soul, so it is a real sacrifice. He’s free, and where his soul goes may be something that we will find out and our characters will search out, but it’s definitely a sacrifice and he knows it is — it’s not a trick.
How does the second half of the season differ from the first 11 episodes, now that Moloch is gone?
What really takes a different turn is between Katrina and Crane, as well. There’s a lot of curiosity about why Katrina is struggling with her powers and her place in this war, and I’ve heard people say is her character underutilized — I would say there’s a difference between underutilized and not realized. When she discovers her full potential, things really get out of control.
The midseason finale saw Moloch and Henry beginning to merge our world with purgatory — now that Moloch is dead, has that process been halted, or will it continue to play out when the show returns? 
The merge is still happening. We kick it off in the midseason finale here where you start to see that Moloch’s army was being raised and starting to merge purgatory with earth, and it absolutely will [continue]. There’s so much I want to talk about because the [season] finale is so exciting and incredible, and I’m really hopeful that it will twist things just as insanely as last season’s did. And part of that twist that I personally think is amazing [is] that we start to see how the cracks in that barrier between purgatory and specifically Sleepy Hollow open up, and purgatory starts to seep in.
You had a slightly longer episode order in season two — 18 episodes versus 13. In a hypothetical third season, what kind of order would you hope for in order to hit the sweet spot in terms of pacing?
I would hope for the same. I think it’s just enough to keep us really on our toes. It is more of a rush to get it done, but I think that I would be happy with 18. Any more than that… I think it’s always fun to have more stories, but I think [on] the production level, I would be happy with 18.
Orlando Jones
When did you learn that Frank would be making the “ultimate sacrifice” in the midseason finale?
I heard about it not long before we shot it, actually. It’s one of those things where the scripts change often and like any episodic television show, it’s not uncommon to get new pages when you show up to work, so even when you think you know where it’s going, you find out you don’t, and pretty early on, I figured out “there’s no sense in me guessing, here.” I knew with a little advance notice but not a lot, and certainly not that way. I didn’t realize it was going to be with the sword and all of that. It was surprising.
What was your reaction when you found out?
Whenever you sign up to do this sort of thing, my first obligation is to the character and what I do for a living, so I was really more concerned with… I often believe there’s this emphasis on action sequences, and that’s cool, but that’s not what I respond to as a fan. I respond to what that character is going through emotionally and how that informs the action, and less the action [itself]. I was just focused on what the sacrifice meant to Irving, given where he’s gone and given where it’s falling in the course of this season. So I was really obsessed about how to make you care, and less about “oh, I’m dying” — whatever with that. [Laughs.] There’s that thing — the 12-year-old boy in me — I remember really well being older than 12 and watching Michael Jordan having to go play basketball after hearing reports that his father had died in this very mysterious death, and then he had the flu, and here he is going into game 7 of the championship, and I just wondered what that must’ve felt like, because his career legacy was going to get judged on whether or not he won that game, but what he had to be going through emotionally, he lost his dad… That really stuck with me, and so I thought, Irving hasn’t seen his family, and so what must it be like to be in that moment, wondering about his wife and daughter, how they’re going to respond, how they’re going to react, never having had a chance to say goodbye? That really was where my head was.
His death scene was so powerful — especially Abbie’s (Nicole Beharie) reaction to it; it was a very visceral, affecting moment.
Yeah, it’s rare that that happens. I often feel like they’re reaching for it [with emotional death scenes], and in this case that wasn’t the case. I always feel that death is really about how it affects those you leave behind and not about the death itself. Those are the parts I’m excited about.
Tell me about the process of filming that fight sequence with War — it seemed like it must’ve been fairly complicated to shoot.
I do all my stunts so I feel like it’s an acting thing for me — there’s a way I want things to land and the way I want him to feel about things. I was really focused on just trying to deliver the elements that were most important, and as a fan of the show first and foremost, I really wanted to see more of Irving’s struggle and how that impacted Macey and Cynthia because he made those choices that he made for his family. Amandla Stenberg and Jill Marie Jones are amazing and I hope that they get to come back to the show so we can see how they’re dealing with the trauma of his passing. I was happy that he got a heroic death, because I felt like that was important. But that’s where I focused, because obviously it’s complicated in the sword work and all that jazz. I love those elements, it was fun to film, because it really is grandiose: he is emotional, he is fighting War who has proven to be a formidable foe, and technically kind of fighting Henry as the operator of War, so it was super personal, and I wanted to make sure it felt very personal and very visceral and not like an action sequence. I wanted you to forget that there was a sword involved at all, so that with each moment of it happening, what you really took in was how much it meant to him.
John Cho has proven that death isn’t exactly final on “Sleepy Hollow,” so do you think there’s a chance we could be seeing Frank again at some point down the road?
I certainly would like to think so. I would like to see how his death has impacted Abbie and Ichabod and Jenny and Katrina and Macey and Cynthia and the host of other characters that are on the show, so if it’s an impetus to really get down to the nitty gritty of what happens when you lose a loved one and what happens when you lose a comrade in the war, that’s awesome. I don’t know, I’ve been a fan of the show since I’ve been on the show so I’m hopeful, certainly, about it, but not well-educated.
What was your take on Frank’s character trajectory as a whole, since fans have taken notice of the fact that he was somewhat sidelined this season?
From the beginning of “Sleepy Hollow,” the co-creators, Alex Kurtzman and Bob Orci and Len Wiseman, have always talked about the amazing diversity and representation on the show, and they also talked about how it wasn’t a conscious choice on their part — they just went with the best actors for specific roles, but the fact that it ended up the way it ended up was very exciting for me. So if you think about the episode where we reveal the true story behind what happened to Abbie and Jenny’s mom, you realize that there’s so much exciting ground to cover with those characters and their backstory, and to learn more about how Abbie became one of the two Witnesses, how we arrived here. I had legit man-tears seeing the interaction between Nicole and Lyndie [Greenwood] and Aunjanue Ellis; I look forward to seeing more of that in the show. And even though Ichabod is obviously a highly evolved man considering the era in which he came from, I look forward to seeing further character development for him that challenges his preconceived notions about the modern world. So if Irving becomes the impetus for us to explore those stories, then as a fan I’m really happy, because I really think that’s an important part of why “Sleepy Hollow” has been relevant as a show in the first place.
And I also would add that the writers have a lot of ground to cover on this show, and it’s always been a bit of a balancing act to tell numerous stories. I guess in the current entertainment and pop culture landscape, the IP is not the only asset; the audience is an essential asset as well. It’s easy and convenient to pigeonhole the audience into being concerned about things like shipping — but they’re unambigiously clear about what matters to them in the programming they watch, and they want characters and storylines that reflect their lived experiences, so I’m glad the show has laid the groundwork for that. I hope they continue to earn it with the audience. And don’t get me wrong, I’m the biggest shipper of them all — I love that people feel invested in the potential pairing between Frank and Jenny after one episode, that kinda blew me away, and Lyndie Greenwood and I are definitely working together in the future on other projects. But the hope and promise that this show began with is still something very close to my heart, and it’s why I was always very proud to be a part of it.
You’ve inadvertently become the show’s unofficial social media ambassador just by being active and creative on Twitter and Tumblr, and you’ve connected with the fanbase in a truly meaningful way that’s still fairly rare to see from content creators, even in today’s connected entertainment industry. What has being involved in the “Sleepy Hollow” fandom taught you, or given you, in your opinion?
I’ve made friends, which was not [something] I thought was gonna happen. I learned a tremendous amount; I’ve always been involved in fandom, since I drug my black ass down to Comic-Con on “MADtv” when no one was even thinking about it and you could park across the street from the convention center and walk in. I’m really grateful, because I believe what has been special about “Sleepy Hollow” for me has been the interaction with fandom and the fact that “Sleepy Hollow” began as the most multicultural show in network history. And it also showcased women with agency for the most part; Jenny and Abbie were women of color who weren’t subservient or dependent on men and I thought that was important — as the father of a little girl, that was important. Amandla Stenberg is one of the only representations I’ve ever seen of a woman of color who’s handicapped. There were big elements here that I thought were big fish, so I’m really proud of the fandom, and I’m proud to be a member of this particular fandom and the other fandoms I’ve been a part of, like “Supernatural” and “Orphan Black” and the like. It’s a special time for the entertainment industry, but I also think that time is underscored by the conversation about diversity — about the status quo — changing. I truly believe there’s an us versus them, and the “us” is people who want to leave this world better and see stories that really reflect what we see in our everyday lives, and the “them” is the people who are okay with the status quo, and I’m not okay with it. In that regard, I am very much a fan, but my position in it as an actor, as a writer, as a producer, is challenging, because I hear it all very loud and clear, and it’s difficult when it’s not my call to make.
How integral do you think social media is for a television show’s success or longevity in the current pop culture climate?
I think it’s essential. We live in a digital world and a connected world. And the belief system that the primary portal is a movie screen or a television screen is just simply not true anymore; that’s 1980s-1990s thinking, that’s just not where we are. I don’t know how much Hollywood is aware of that, because as you say, what I do, what Misha [Collins of “Supernatural”] has been doing, there’s just not a lot of that around. And we’re not interacting with the fanbase as agents of the show, we’re interacting with the fanbase as members of the fanbase, so that’s a very different thing. How much of that has taken root in Hollywood remains to be seen. If I’m looking for examples of it, there aren’t a lot.
Do you have any other projects in the works, so that fans can continue to get their Orlando Jones fix? I loved your webseries, “Tainted Love” — are there any new developments on that front?
Well, Lyndie Greenwood is gonna be Jezebel — we’re making the feature version. That’s gonna be super exciting, I think she’s gonna be incredible and I’m looking to poach as many of my other castmates as I can because I really enjoy working with them, so that’s gonna be fun. We’re finally going to do our official launch of our multicultural emoticons, iRoc Emoticons, that’s gonna be fun. I just believe that diversity is a huge thing and looking at how much of the world is underrepresented right now in mainstream media is troublesome to me, so I’m excited to be a part of projects that continue to tear down those barriers. I’m probably going to drop another mixtape. [The first one took] nine days — it was kind of a fluke idea out of nowhere and we were like “let’s do it” so I threw caution to the wind and jumped in and it’s been exciting. It seems to have hit a cord, I think we’re at 15,000 downloads and picking up thousands every week, so that’s been really fun just to watch it. I’ve gotten a lot of requests to do another, so I think I’m going to do a workout party version of that, and I’m gonna drop another one which will have some of the stuff that’s on this one and then a bunch of new stuff too.

(SPOILERS) Death On The Walking Dead.... Is It The Saddest Yet?




Much like millions of other horror fans out there, I've just finished watching the latest episode of The Walking Dead - and I've still got tears in my eyes while writing this. I think it goes without saying that this article contains MASSIVE spoilers for the TV show up until this point, so if you haven't seen that far, I advise you proceed with caution!
So If you've read on this far, I'm presuming you've seen the latest episode of The Walking Dead - and chances are, you're as gutted over the last 5 minutes of the episode as I am.
Over the past week there's been a lot of speculation over a main character death for the mid-season finale, with the two main names coming up being Carol and Beth. Personally, I guessed it was going to be Norman Reedus' character Daryl that got the axe, after hearing rumors that Reedus had cried for an hour on set before filming the mid season finale. Naturally I presumed that Reedus was upset that he had to leave the show, hence the tears - but it seems that he actually had a strong relationship with Emily Kinney on set.
There have been many sad deaths on The Walking Dead, but I would have to say that Beth's passing has upset me the most - simply because she was so young, and went out in such a violent way. Saying this, I had never been a fan of Beth, I in fact found her to be a rather annoying character - up until recently, when she was kidnapped and trapped inside Grady Memorial Hospital. By that stage I really felt for her character, and just wanted to others to rescue her.
Not to mention the fact that no one saw it coming. One minute she was about to leave with the group, and then next minute she had a bullet go through her skull - and it was pretty graphic, to say the least. So was her death the saddest yet? Hmm well...... I'd say so.


Police: Man assaults Indian movie star because of the length of her dress

Bollywood actress Gauhar Khan at the International Indian Film Academy Awards in Tampa, Florida, in April.
New Delhi (CNN) -- An Indian man slapped a movie star in the face during the filming of a TV show in Mumbai because of the length of her dress, police said.
The man, Mohammad Akil Malik, is accused of assaulting Gauhar Khan, an actress and TV host, in a break in shooting for a music-themed reality show on Sunday evening, said V.S. Chavan, a local police official.
Malik also tried to "manhandle" Khan while asking her why she was wearing a short dress, Chavan said Tuesday.
He demanded to know "how she could wear skimpy outfits and dance to cheap songs despite being a Muslim," the Times of India reported, citing an unidentified police official.
Private security guards from the TV show overpowered Malik at the scene and handed him over to police.
Malik, who works as a driver, was arrested on charges of assault, molestation and threatening behavior and is due to appear in court on Thursday, Chavan said.
Khan has acted in several Bollywood films. She gained widespread attention last year thanks to her role in another Indian reality show.

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies, first look review: 'begs not to exist'


Director: Peter Jackson. Starring: Ian McKellen, Martin Freeman, Richard Armitage, Luke Evans, Evangeline Lilly, Orlando Bloom, Aidan Turner, Manu Bennett, Lee Pace, Stephen Fry, Sylvester McCoy, Benedict Cumberbatch, Cate Blanchett, Christopher Lee, Ian Holm. 12A cert, 144 min.
“So began a battle that none had expected,” wrote JRR Tolkien in the third-from-last chapter of The Hobbit. “And it was called The Battle of the Five Armies, and it was very terrible.” Peter Jackson’s expansion of this epochal but barely-described fracas, in his third and final film from this slim book, is neither very terrible nor remotely unexpected. It’s a series of stomping footnotes in search of a climax.
In terms of story so far, it ends virtually when it starts – with super-peeved dragon Smaug (Benedict Cumberbatch) raining down fiery destruction on the pitiful residents of Laketown, and facing the last-ditch heroism of an archer called Bard (Luke Evans).
Everything else is scraps, in both senses. Jackson’s one recourse is to ape the here-we-go-again war mania of The Return of the King. Humans, dwarves and elves duke it out with orcs and wild wolves. It's a whopping great grudge match, a squabble over the contents of Smaug’s mountain lair, and goodness knows what else.
The trouble is that Jackson can’t make it mean very much: when every life on Middle Earth is seemingly at stake, few individually grab our attention. There’s more aftermath than plot left, and very little of it has to do with Bilbo (Martin Freeman), who feels increasingly like a forlorn bystander in his own franchise.
The further and more competently the movie trundles on, the more it begs not to exist, really: hindsight favours a two-part adaptation at most. This isn’t to say there aren’t bright spots. However it was fudged, 92-year-old Christopher Lee doing Shaolin kung fu with his magic staff is great value. And the last third is rescued by one meaty, entertaining set piece – crumbling citadel, frozen lake, one-on-one duels between orcs and the principal cast. Freeman, and Evangeline Lilly as the not-in-Tolkien elf maiden Tauriel, inject some unforced pathos which puts many of their dewy-eyed co-stars to shame.
The bloom has come off Orlando, though, whose main achievement as Legolas – other than some ridiculous mid-air running up collapsing masonry – is to illustrate perfectly what Joey Tribbiani from Friends called “smell the fart acting”.
When the dwarf leader Thorin (Richard Armitage) imagines himself drowning in a pool of molten gold, Jackson’s pet message that Greed Is Bad rings out again – but you have to wonder if a triple-your-money release strategy is quite the seemliest context to preach it in. At 6ft 2", Armitage must be the tallest actor ever to play a dwarf. The film is the opposite: a paragraph on steroids.

People: Springsteen, Martin stand in for Bono


Bono has some top-notch understudies: Bruce Springsteen and Chris Martin of Coldplay acted as the U2 frontman, who is recovering from a bike accident, at a concert Monday night honoring World AIDS Day.
Springsteen performed “Where the Streets Have No Name” and “I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For” alongside U2’s Adam ClaytonThe Edge and Larry Mullen in Times Square in front of few hundred fans, who stood in the rain.
Aside from highlighting the fight against AIDS, the night’s other theme was supporting an injured Bono. Springsteen said he hoped the 54-year-old was recovering in Dublin, and Martin told the crowd after performing: “Sending my love to Bono.”
A bike accident in Central Park last month left Bono with multiple injuries, including a facial fracture involving his left eye socket, a fractured left shoulder blade and a fractured left elbow. He underwent a five-hour surgery.
The concert, billed “U2 Minus 1 – Live in New York Tonight,” also featured a pregnant Carrie Underwood and Kanye West, who was energetic when he performed hits including “Jesus Walks,” “Power” and “Stronger.”

Cosby resigns from university board

Under fire from at least 20 women who have accused him of sexual assault, Bill Cosby on Monday resigned from Temple University’s board of trustees, a seat he has held for 32 years.
The decision came amid mounting pressure from some corners for the Philadelphia university to cut ties with its beloved benefactor and longtime public face, including a change.org petition with more than 1,000 signatures.
“I have always been proud of my association with Temple University,” Cosby said in a statement, released by the university. “I have always wanted to do what would be in the best interests of the university and its students. As a result, I have tendered my resignation from the Temple University Board of Trustees.”
The decision followed high-level discussion by university leaders over the last couple days. Over the last couple weeks, several members of the board of trustees had spoken in support of the 77-year-old comedian and actor, who graduated from Temple.

Friday 28 November 2014

Roseanne Barr tweet 'joke' about Cosby taken down


Roseanne Barr

Here's a safe strategy for the moment: Don't joke about Bill Cosby.
Roseanne Barr learned this on Wednesday when she tweeted a selfie of her swollen, bloody, misshapen face and joked about a "tussle" with Cosby.
Splat. That did not go over well.
So she deleted the tweet and provided an explanation: Kidding!
Also, she got a chemical peel.








You have to hand it to Barr: She's not afraid to look like a beat-up Macy's parade balloon on social media and show what she does to try to look young in Hollywood.
But she might be a little more afraid of misjudging the zeitgeist when it comes to discussing Cosby, the entertainment icon who is rapidly losing his beloved status as allegations pile up daily that he drugged and sexually assaulted multiple women going back decades.

PD James, queen of crime fiction who gave the world detective Adam Dalgliesh, dies aged 94

PD James has died aged 94. The novelist is considered one of the best crime writers in modern history


The acclaimed crime novelist PD James has died at the age of 94.  
James, who became Baroness James of Holland Park in 1991, is the author of 20 detective novels and creator of popular Adam Dalgliesh series. 
She is survived by her two children, five grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren

Her most famous works are the Adam Dalgliesh series, immortalised by actor Roy Marsden in film and television. 
The actor today said her death was a 'great loss'.  
'It is with great sadness that the family of author P D James, Baroness James of Holland Park OBE, FRSL, FRSA, announce that she died peacefully at her home in Oxford on the morning of 27 November 2014, aged 94, a much-loved mother, grandmother and great-grandmother.
'The family have requested privacy at this time,' a spokesman for the novelist said this morning.

Since publishing her first novel at the age of 42, Baroness James has become known as one of the country's finest crime writers.   
The author, born Phyllis Dorothy James in Oxford in 1920, always showed a keen interest in literature, inventing fictional characters for her younger siblings when they were children.
Besieged by austerity and put in charge of her two siblings at the age of 14, she was forced to abandon her dreams of writing for a job at the theatre.  
A career in the NHS,  and in various departments of the British Civil Service followed, providing the writer with a vast understanding of such environments which would become commonplace in her later crime series.  


She did not publish her first novel until the age of 42 after months of secrecy, her only confidante being her husband who, at the time, was being treated in a psychiatric hospital. 
A doctor in the war, he returned in poor mental health and died some years later. 
Describing herself in interviews as a 'late starter', Baroness James was quickly rewarded for her literary talents. 
The Adam Dalgliesh novels, starting with Cover Her Face, were adapted by ITV in 1983 in a 10-part series starring Roy Marsden.


In 2003 the BBC took over to adapt two more starring Martin Shaw. 
Her 1992 novel Children of Men was made into a film by Alfonso Cuarón in 2006. 
Five years later,  the then 91-year-old reproduced Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice to critical acclaim. 
Her other fictional work, The Children of Men, also received praise. 
Among her many accolades is the International Crime Writing Hall of Fame 2008 and the Grand Master Award from Mystery Writers of America, 1999.  
In her role as Governor of the BBC, Ms James challenged the then-director general of the BBC while guest-editing the Today programme in 2009. 
She urged that the salaries of BBC executives become public knowledge, which they now are.  
While Baroness James spoke of her lack of sentimentality in fiction, she enjoyed a strong connection to the Church and its values in reality. 
Speaking at St Paul's Cathedral in May last year, she told the congregation: 'Even our religious duties must come secondary to meeting the need of another human being. 


When we see that need we should meet it and not have excuses.' 
Roy Marsden, who gleaned his most prolific role as Baroness James's Adam Dalgliesh, led tributes to the writer today. 
'She was a gentle, slightly coquettish, but gentle woman. She was great, it's a great loss,' Mr Marsden, 73, told MailOnline this afternoon. '


‘She used to write, better than anything else I’ve read in my life, a description of place. She'd have made the greatest travel writer if she turned her pen to it. She could evoke the most extraordinary places, when you read her books it was that that you were drawn to, and out of that were these extraordinary characters.'
Speaking of his time working with Baroness James, he added:
'It was a wonderful period and a very good period of television, when it was in a powerful and strong place, we were making a lot of good dramas.
‘I always associate her (stories) with a very happy, creative period in my life.
‘It's always been good, I'm very lucky.' 
Her publishers Faber & Faber said: 'This is a very sad day for us at Faber.
'It is difficult to express our profound sadness at losing PD James, one of the world's great writers and a Faber author since her first publication in 1962.
'She was so very remarkable in every aspect of her life, an inspiration and great friend to us all. 
'It is a privilege to publish her extraordinary books. 
'Working with her was always the best of times, full of joy. We will miss her hugely.' 
Fellow crime write Ian Rankin was among the first to publically pay tribute to Baroness James this morning.  
'So sad about PD James. Every event I did with her was a joy. Sharp intellect, ready wit. She will be missed,' he wrote on Twitter.
US crime writer Patricia Cornwell said: 'RIP PD James and thanks for encouraging me when I was getting started,' while Chelsea Clinton wrote: 'Very sad to hear of P.D. James passing, one of the all time great mystery writers. My thoughts and prayers are with her family and friends.'
The Prime Minister paid tribute to one of the country's 'greatest crime writers who thrilled and inspired generations of readers'.  
'Saddened to hear of the death of PD James, one of the UK's greatest crime writers, who thrilled and inspired generations of readers,' David Cameron added. 
The Reverend Canon Michael Hampel, Precentor of St Paul's Cathedral and a friend of Baroness James, said: 'We are desperately sad to hear of P D James' death. 
'Her creative genius put her alongside the great authors of detective fiction, not least Dorothy L Sayers whom Lady James greatly admired. 
'She was a woman of sharp intellect and profound grace and those of us who met her here at St Paul’s were hugely privileged to have done so.' 
The Rev Richard Coles added: 'RIP PD James. I looked after her when she stayed at my theological college researching a book. "Call me Phyllis," she said, "while I'm here"'
BBC Women's Hour Jenni Murray praised the writer whom she described as a 'great friend' to the programme. 
Baroness Stowell, Leader of the Lords, said: 'In addition to being an acclaimed novelist who brought so much pleasure to so many through her writing, PD James also made a great contribution to public life as a civil servant, a BBC Governor and as a peer of the realm.
'She was a loyal member of the Conservative party and was much loved by all sides of the House of Lords. 
'Her contributions in the chamber were characteristically modest and considered, and we shall all miss her greatly. Our thoughts are with her family and friends at this sad time.'